Oral Presentation on
Clinical Neurology
Topic: Substance Dependence Alters Serum Lipid Levels in Addicted Male
Patients
Presenter : Dr.Xiaoni Zhang,China
Abstract
Objectives: Studies have shown that opiate and heroin dependence causes
alterations in serum lipids. In this study, we investigated the relationship
between different types of substance dependence and serum lipid levels.
Methods: Serum lipid levels were measured in 97 patients with different types
of substance dependence (heroin, methamphetamine,
ketamine, and codeine phosphate dependence), and in 99 healthy subjects. The
clinical characteristics of substance-dependent patients were also
investigated.
Results: Serum total cholesterol (TC; 3.74±1.02 mmol/L, P=0.017) and
high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C; 1.12±0.19, P=0.007) levels were
lower, and triglyceride levels (TG; 1.73±0.89 mmol/L, P=0.008) were higher in
the heroin dependence group compared to the control group. Serum TG (1.74±1.11
mmol/L, P=0.000), HDL-C (1.44±0.30 mmol/L, P=0.011), apolipoprotein A-1
(ApoA-1; 1.55±0.28 g/L, P=0.000), and apolipoprotein B (ApoB; 1.55±0.28 g/L,
P=0.000) levels were higher in the methamphetamine dependence group, while serum
TG (2.49±1.56 mmol/L, P=0.000) and ApoB (0.93±0.25 g/L, P=0.000) levels were
higher in the ketamine dependence group compared to the control group.
Additionally, the codeine dependence group exhibited higher serum TG (1.94±1.34
mmol/L, P=0.000) and ApoB (0.82±0.28 g/L, P=0.003) levels. We also found that
patients with psychotic
symptoms had significantly higher TG levels in the heroin, methamphetamine,
and ketamine dependence groups, and lower TC and HDL-C levels in the heroin
dependence group.
Conclusions: Our data suggested that different types of substance dependence caused
varying degrees of change in serum lipid levels, and that hypertriglyceridemia
was consistent with psychotic symptoms in substance abuse patients.
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